Docs: add warning on non-ASCII results from SpamAssassin. Bug 1863
[exim.git] / doc / doc-txt / NewStuff
1 New Features in Exim
2 --------------------
3
4 This file contains descriptions of new features that have been added to Exim.
5 Before a formal release, there may be quite a lot of detail so that people can
6 test from the snapshots or the CVS before the documentation is updated. Once
7 the documentation is updated, this file is reduced to a short list.
8
9 Version 4.88
10 ------------
11
12 1. The new perl_taintmode option allows to run the embedded perl
13 interpreter in taint mode.
14
15 2. New log_selector: dnssec, adds a "DS" tag to acceptance and delivery lines.
16
17 3. Speculative debugging, via a "kill" option to the "control=debug" ACL
18 modifier.
19
20 4. New expansion item ${sha3:<string>} / ${sha3_<N>:<string>}.
21 N can be 224, 256 (default), 384, 512.
22 With GnuTLS 3.5.0 or later, only.
23
24 5. Facility for named queues: A commandline argument can specify
25 the queue name for a queue operation, and an ACL modifier can set
26 the queue to be used for a message. A $queue_name variable gives
27 visibility.
28
29 6. New expansion operators base32/base32d.
30
31
32 Version 4.87
33 ------------
34
35 1. The ACL conditions regex and mime_regex now capture substrings
36 into numeric variables $regex1 to 9, like the "match" expansion condition.
37
38 2. New $callout_address variable records the address used for a spam=,
39 malware= or verify= callout.
40
41 3. Transports now take a "max_parallel" option, to limit concurrency.
42
43 4. Expansion operators ${ipv6norm:<string>} and ${ipv6denorm:<string>}.
44 The latter expands to a 8-element colon-sep set of hex digits including
45 leading zeroes. A trailing ipv4-style dotted-decimal set is converted
46 to hex. Pure ipv4 addresses are converted to IPv4-mapped IPv6.
47 The former operator strips leading zeroes and collapses the longest
48 set of 0-groups to a double-colon.
49
50 5. New "-bP config" support, to dump the effective configuration.
51
52 6. New $dkim_key_length variable.
53
54 7. New base64d and base64 expansion items (the existing str2b64 being a
55 synonym of the latter). Add support in base64 for certificates.
56
57 8. New main configuration option "bounce_return_linesize_limit" to
58 avoid oversize bodies in bounces. The dafault value matches RFC
59 limits.
60
61 9. New $initial_cwd expansion variable.
62
63
64 Version 4.86
65 ------------
66
67 1. Support for using the system standard CA bundle.
68
69 2. New expansion items $config_file, $config_dir, containing the file
70 and directory name of the main configuration file. Also $exim_version.
71
72 3. New "malware=" support for Avast.
73
74 4. New "spam=" variant option for Rspamd.
75
76 5. Assorted options on malware= and spam= scanners.
77
78 6. A commandline option to write a comment into the logfile.
79
80 7. If built with EXPERIMENTAL_SOCKS feature enabled, the smtp transport can
81 be configured to make connections via socks5 proxies.
82
83 8. If built with EXPERIMENTAL_INTERNATIONAL, support is included for
84 the transmission of UTF-8 envelope addresses.
85
86 9. If built with EXPERIMENTAL_INTERNATIONAL, an expansion item for a commonly
87 used encoding of Maildir folder names.
88
89 10. A logging option for slow DNS lookups.
90
91 11. New ${env {<variable>}} expansion.
92
93 12. A non-SMTP authenticator using information from TLS client certificates.
94
95 13. Main option "tls_eccurve" for selecting an Elliptic Curve for TLS.
96 Patch originally by Wolfgang Breyha.
97
98 14. Main option "dns_trust_aa" for trusting your local nameserver at the
99 same level as DNSSEC.
100
101
102 Version 4.85
103 ------------
104
105 1. If built with EXPERIMENTAL_DANE feature enabled, Exim will follow the
106 DANE smtp draft to assess a secure chain of trust of the certificate
107 used to establish the TLS connection based on a TLSA record in the
108 domain of the sender.
109
110 2. The EXPERIMENTAL_TPDA feature has been renamed to EXPERIMENTAL_EVENT
111 and several new events have been created. The reason is because it has
112 been expanded beyond just firing events during the transport phase. Any
113 existing TPDA transport options will have to be rewritten to use a new
114 $event_name expansion variable in a condition. Refer to the
115 experimental-spec.txt for details and examples.
116
117 3. The EXPERIMENTAL_CERTNAMES features is an enhancement to verify that
118 server certs used for TLS match the result of the MX lookup. It does
119 not use the same mechanism as DANE.
120
121
122 Version 4.84
123 ------------
124
125
126 Version 4.83
127 ------------
128
129 1. If built with the EXPERIMENTAL_PROXY feature enabled, Exim can be
130 configured to expect an initial header from a proxy that will make the
131 actual external source IP:host be used in exim instead of the IP of the
132 proxy that is connecting to it.
133
134 2. New verify option header_names_ascii, which will check to make sure
135 there are no non-ASCII characters in header names. Exim itself handles
136 those non-ASCII characters, but downstream apps may not, so Exim can
137 detect and reject if those characters are present.
138
139 3. New expansion operator ${utf8clean:string} to replace malformed UTF8
140 codepoints with valid ones.
141
142 4. New malware type "sock". Talks over a Unix or TCP socket, sending one
143 command line and matching a regex against the return data for trigger
144 and a second regex to extract malware_name. The mail spoolfile name can
145 be included in the command line.
146
147 5. The smtp transport now supports options "tls_verify_hosts" and
148 "tls_try_verify_hosts". If either is set the certificate verification
149 is split from the encryption operation. The default remains that a failed
150 verification cancels the encryption.
151
152 6. New SERVERS override of default ldap server list. In the ACLs, an ldap
153 lookup can now set a list of servers to use that is different from the
154 default list.
155
156 7. New command-line option -C for exiqgrep to specify alternate exim.conf
157 file when searching the queue.
158
159 8. OCSP now supports GnuTLS also, if you have version 3.1.3 or later of that.
160
161 9. Support for DNSSEC on outbound connections.
162
163 10. New variables "tls_(in,out)_(our,peer)cert" and expansion item
164 "certextract" to extract fields from them. Hash operators md5 and sha1
165 work over them for generating fingerprints, and a new sha256 operator
166 for them added.
167
168 11. PRDR is now supported dy default.
169
170 12. OCSP stapling is now supported by default.
171
172 13. If built with the EXPERIMENTAL_DSN feature enabled, Exim will output
173 Delivery Status Notification messages in MIME format, and negociate
174 DSN features per RFC 3461.
175
176
177 Version 4.82
178 ------------
179
180 1. New command-line option -bI:sieve will list all supported sieve extensions
181 of this Exim build on standard output, one per line.
182 ManageSieve (RFC 5804) providers managing scripts for use by Exim should
183 query this to establish the correct list to include in the protocol's
184 SIEVE capability line.
185
186 2. If the -n option is combined with the -bP option, then the name of an
187 emitted option is not output, only the value (if visible to you).
188 For instance, "exim -n -bP pid_file_path" should just emit a pathname
189 followed by a newline, and no other text.
190
191 3. When built with SUPPORT_TLS and USE_GNUTLS, the SMTP transport driver now
192 has a "tls_dh_min_bits" option, to set the minimum acceptable number of
193 bits in the Diffie-Hellman prime offered by a server (in DH ciphersuites)
194 acceptable for security. (Option accepted but ignored if using OpenSSL).
195 Defaults to 1024, the old value. May be lowered only to 512, or raised as
196 far as you like. Raising this may hinder TLS interoperability with other
197 sites and is not currently recommended. Lowering this will permit you to
198 establish a TLS session which is not as secure as you might like.
199
200 Unless you really know what you are doing, leave it alone.
201
202 4. If not built with DISABLE_DNSSEC, Exim now has the main option
203 dns_dnssec_ok; if set to 1 then Exim will initialise the resolver library
204 to send the DO flag to your recursive resolver. If you have a recursive
205 resolver, which can set the Authenticated Data (AD) flag in results, Exim
206 can now detect this. Exim does not perform validation itself, instead
207 relying upon a trusted path to the resolver.
208
209 Current status: work-in-progress; $sender_host_dnssec variable added.
210
211 5. DSCP support for outbound connections: on a transport using the smtp driver,
212 set "dscp = ef", for instance, to cause the connections to have the relevant
213 DSCP (IPv4 TOS or IPv6 TCLASS) value in the header.
214
215 Similarly for inbound connections, there is a new control modifier, dscp,
216 so "warn control = dscp/ef" in the connect ACL, or after authentication.
217
218 Supported values depend upon system libraries. "exim -bI:dscp" to list the
219 ones Exim knows of. You can also set a raw number 0..0x3F.
220
221 6. The -G command-line flag is no longer ignored; it is now equivalent to an
222 ACL setting "control = suppress_local_fixups". The -L command-line flag
223 is now accepted and forces use of syslog, with the provided tag as the
224 process name. A few other flags used by Sendmail are now accepted and
225 ignored.
226
227 7. New cutthrough routing feature. Requested by a "control = cutthrough_delivery"
228 ACL modifier; works for single-recipient mails which are recieved on and
229 deliverable via SMTP. Using the connection made for a recipient verify,
230 if requested before the verify, or a new one made for the purpose while
231 the inbound connection is still active. The bulk of the mail item is copied
232 direct from the inbound socket to the outbound (as well as the spool file).
233 When the source notifies the end of data, the data acceptance by the destination
234 is negociated before the acceptance is sent to the source. If the destination
235 does not accept the mail item, for example due to content-scanning, the item
236 is not accepted from the source and therefore there is no need to generate
237 a bounce mail. This is of benefit when providing a secondary-MX service.
238 The downside is that delays are under the control of the ultimate destination
239 system not your own.
240
241 The Recieved-by: header on items delivered by cutthrough is generated
242 early in reception rather than at the end; this will affect any timestamp
243 included. The log line showing delivery is recorded before that showing
244 reception; it uses a new ">>" tag instead of "=>".
245
246 To support the feature, verify-callout connections can now use ESMTP and TLS.
247 The usual smtp transport options are honoured, plus a (new, default everything)
248 hosts_verify_avoid_tls.
249
250 New variable families named tls_in_cipher, tls_out_cipher etc. are introduced
251 for specific access to the information for each connection. The old names
252 are present for now but deprecated.
253
254 Not yet supported: IGNOREQUOTA, SIZE, PIPELINING.
255
256 8. New expansion operators ${listnamed:name} to get the content of a named list
257 and ${listcount:string} to count the items in a list.
258
259 9. New global option "gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11", defaults false. The GnuTLS
260 rewrite in 4.80 combines with GnuTLS 2.12.0 or later, to autoload PKCS11
261 modules. For some situations this is desirable, but we expect admin in
262 those situations to know they want the feature. More commonly, it means
263 that GUI user modules get loaded and are broken by the setuid Exim being
264 unable to access files specified in environment variables and passed
265 through, thus breakage. So we explicitly inhibit the PKCS11 initialisation
266 unless this new option is set.
267
268 Some older OS's with earlier versions of GnuTLS might not have pkcs11 ability,
269 so have also added a build option which can be used to build Exim with GnuTLS
270 but without trying to use any kind of PKCS11 support. Uncomment this in the
271 Local/Makefile:
272
273 AVOID_GNUTLS_PKCS11=yes
274
275 10. The "acl = name" condition on an ACL now supports optional arguments.
276 New expansion item "${acl {name}{arg}...}" and expansion condition
277 "acl {{name}{arg}...}" are added. In all cases up to nine arguments
278 can be used, appearing in $acl_arg1 to $acl_arg9 for the called ACL.
279 Variable $acl_narg contains the number of arguments. If the ACL sets
280 a "message =" value this becomes the result of the expansion item,
281 or the value of $value for the expansion condition. If the ACL returns
282 accept the expansion condition is true; if reject, false. A defer
283 return results in a forced fail.
284
285 11. Routers and transports can now have multiple headers_add and headers_remove
286 option lines. The concatenated list is used.
287
288 12. New ACL modifier "remove_header" can remove headers before message gets
289 handled by routers/transports.
290
291 13. New dnsdb lookup pseudo-type "a+". A sequence of "a6" (if configured),
292 "aaaa" and "a" lookups is done and the full set of results returned.
293
294 14. New expansion variable $headers_added with content from ACL add_header
295 modifier (but not yet added to message).
296
297 15. New 8bitmime status logging option for received messages. Log field "M8S".
298
299 16. New authenticated_sender logging option, adding to log field "A".
300
301 17. New expansion variables $router_name and $transport_name. Useful
302 particularly for debug_print as -bt commandline option does not
303 require privilege whereas -d does.
304
305 18. If built with EXPERIMENTAL_PRDR, per-recipient data responses per a
306 proposed extension to SMTP from Eric Hall.
307
308 19. The pipe transport has gained the force_command option, to allow
309 decorating commands from user .forward pipe aliases with prefix
310 wrappers, for instance.
311
312 20. Callout connections can now AUTH; the same controls as normal delivery
313 connections apply.
314
315 21. Support for DMARC, using opendmarc libs, can be enabled. It adds new
316 options: dmarc_forensic_sender, dmarc_history_file, and dmarc_tld_file.
317 It adds new expansion variables $dmarc_ar_header, $dmarc_status,
318 $dmarc_status_text, and $dmarc_used_domain. It adds a new acl modifier
319 dmarc_status. It adds new control flags dmarc_disable_verify and
320 dmarc_enable_forensic.
321
322 22. Add expansion variable $authenticated_fail_id, which is the username
323 provided to the authentication method which failed. It is available
324 for use in subsequent ACL processing (typically quit or notquit ACLs).
325
326 23. New ACL modifer "udpsend" can construct a UDP packet to send to a given
327 UDP host and port.
328
329 24. New ${hexquote:..string..} expansion operator converts non-printable
330 characters in the string to \xNN form.
331
332 25. Experimental TPDA (Transport Post Delivery Action) function added.
333 Patch provided by Axel Rau.
334
335 26. Experimental Redis lookup added. Patch provided by Warren Baker.
336
337
338 Version 4.80
339 ------------
340
341 1. New authenticator driver, "gsasl". Server-only (at present).
342 This is a SASL interface, licensed under GPL, which can be found at
343 http://www.gnu.org/software/gsasl/.
344 This system does not provide sources of data for authentication, so
345 careful use needs to be made of the conditions in Exim.
346
347 2. New authenticator driver, "heimdal_gssapi". Server-only.
348 A replacement for using cyrus_sasl with Heimdal, now that $KRB5_KTNAME
349 is no longer honoured for setuid programs by Heimdal. Use the
350 "server_keytab" option to point to the keytab.
351
352 3. The "pkg-config" system can now be used when building Exim to reference
353 cflags and library information for lookups and authenticators, rather
354 than having to update "CFLAGS", "AUTH_LIBS", "LOOKUP_INCLUDE" and
355 "LOOKUP_LIBS" directly. Similarly for handling the TLS library support
356 without adjusting "TLS_INCLUDE" and "TLS_LIBS".
357
358 In addition, setting PCRE_CONFIG=yes will query the pcre-config tool to
359 find the headers and libraries for PCRE.
360
361 4. New expansion variable $tls_bits.
362
363 5. New lookup type, "dbmjz". Key is an Exim list, the elements of which will
364 be joined together with ASCII NUL characters to construct the key to pass
365 into the DBM library. Can be used with gsasl to access sasldb2 files as
366 used by Cyrus SASL.
367
368 6. OpenSSL now supports TLS1.1 and TLS1.2 with OpenSSL 1.0.1.
369
370 Avoid release 1.0.1a if you can. Note that the default value of
371 "openssl_options" is no longer "+dont_insert_empty_fragments", as that
372 increased susceptibility to attack. This may still have interoperability
373 implications for very old clients (see version 4.31 change 37) but
374 administrators can choose to make the trade-off themselves and restore
375 compatibility at the cost of session security.
376
377 7. Use of the new expansion variable $tls_sni in the main configuration option
378 tls_certificate will cause Exim to re-expand the option, if the client
379 sends the TLS Server Name Indication extension, to permit choosing a
380 different certificate; tls_privatekey will also be re-expanded. You must
381 still set these options to expand to valid files when $tls_sni is not set.
382
383 The SMTP Transport has gained the option tls_sni, which will set a hostname
384 for outbound TLS sessions, and set $tls_sni too.
385
386 A new log_selector, +tls_sni, has been added, to log received SNI values
387 for Exim as a server.
388
389 8. The existing "accept_8bitmime" option now defaults to true. This means
390 that Exim is deliberately not strictly RFC compliant. We're following
391 Dan Bernstein's advice in http://cr.yp.to/smtp/8bitmime.html by default.
392 Those who disagree, or know that they are talking to mail servers that,
393 even today, are not 8-bit clean, need to turn off this option.
394
395 9. Exim can now be started with -bw (with an optional timeout, given as
396 -bw<timespec>). With this, stdin at startup is a socket that is
397 already listening for connections. This has a more modern name of
398 "socket activation", but forcing the activated socket to fd 0. We're
399 interested in adding more support for modern variants.
400
401 10. ${eval } now uses 64-bit values on supporting platforms. A new "G" suffix
402 for numbers indicates multiplication by 1024^3.
403
404 11. The GnuTLS support has been revamped; the three options gnutls_require_kx,
405 gnutls_require_mac & gnutls_require_protocols are no longer supported.
406 tls_require_ciphers is now parsed by gnutls_priority_init(3) as a priority
407 string, documentation for which is at:
408 http://www.gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html
409
410 SNI support has been added to Exim's GnuTLS integration too.
411
412 For sufficiently recent GnuTLS libraries, ${randint:..} will now use
413 gnutls_rnd(), asking for GNUTLS_RND_NONCE level randomness.
414
415 12. With OpenSSL, if built with EXPERIMENTAL_OCSP, a new option tls_ocsp_file
416 is now available. If the contents of the file are valid, then Exim will
417 send that back in response to a TLS status request; this is OCSP Stapling.
418 Exim will not maintain the contents of the file in any way: administrators
419 are responsible for ensuring that it is up-to-date.
420
421 See "experimental-spec.txt" for more details.
422
423 13. ${lookup dnsdb{ }} supports now SPF record types. They are handled
424 identically to TXT record lookups.
425
426 14. New expansion variable $tod_epoch_l for higher-precision time.
427
428 15. New global option tls_dh_max_bits, defaulting to current value of NSS
429 hard-coded limit of DH ephemeral bits, to fix interop problems caused by
430 GnuTLS 2.12 library recommending a bit count higher than NSS supports.
431
432 16. tls_dhparam now used by both OpenSSL and GnuTLS, can be path or identifier.
433 Option can now be a path or an identifier for a standard prime.
434 If unset, we use the DH prime from section 2.2 of RFC 5114, "ike23".
435 Set to "historic" to get the old GnuTLS behaviour of auto-generated DH
436 primes.
437
438 17. SSLv2 now disabled by default in OpenSSL. (Never supported by GnuTLS).
439 Use "openssl_options -no_sslv2" to re-enable support, if your OpenSSL
440 install was not built with OPENSSL_NO_SSL2 ("no-ssl2").
441
442
443 Version 4.77
444 ------------
445
446 1. New options for the ratelimit ACL condition: /count= and /unique=.
447 The /noupdate option has been replaced by a /readonly option.
448
449 2. The SMTP transport's protocol option may now be set to "smtps", to
450 use SSL-on-connect outbound.
451
452 3. New variable $av_failed, set true if the AV scanner deferred; ie, when
453 there is a problem talking to the AV scanner, or the AV scanner running.
454
455 4. New expansion conditions, "inlist" and "inlisti", which take simple lists
456 and check if the search item is a member of the list. This does not
457 support named lists, but does subject the list part to string expansion.
458
459 5. Unless the new EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS build option is set when Exim was
460 built, Exim no longer performs string expansion on the second string of
461 the match_* expansion conditions: "match_address", "match_domain",
462 "match_ip" & "match_local_part". Named lists can still be used.
463
464
465 Version 4.76
466 ------------
467
468 1. The global option "dns_use_edns0" may be set to coerce EDNS0 usage on
469 or off in the resolver library.
470
471
472 Version 4.75
473 ------------
474
475 1. In addition to the existing LDAP and LDAP/SSL ("ldaps") support, there
476 is now LDAP/TLS support, given sufficiently modern OpenLDAP client
477 libraries. The following global options have been added in support of
478 this: ldap_ca_cert_dir, ldap_ca_cert_file, ldap_cert_file, ldap_cert_key,
479 ldap_cipher_suite, ldap_require_cert, ldap_start_tls.
480
481 2. The pipe transport now takes a boolean option, "freeze_signal", default
482 false. When true, if the external delivery command exits on a signal then
483 Exim will freeze the message in the queue, instead of generating a bounce.
484
485 3. Log filenames may now use %M as an escape, instead of %D (still available).
486 The %M pattern expands to yyyymm, providing month-level resolution.
487
488 4. The $message_linecount variable is now updated for the maildir_tag option,
489 in the same way as $message_size, to reflect the real number of lines,
490 including any header additions or removals from transport.
491
492 5. When contacting a pool of SpamAssassin servers configured in spamd_address,
493 Exim now selects entries randomly, to better scale in a cluster setup.
494
495
496 Version 4.74
497 ------------
498
499 1. SECURITY FIX: privilege escalation flaw fixed. On Linux (and only Linux)
500 the flaw permitted the Exim run-time user to cause root to append to
501 arbitrary files of the attacker's choosing, with the content based
502 on content supplied by the attacker.
503
504 2. Exim now supports loading some lookup types at run-time, using your
505 platform's dlopen() functionality. This has limited platform support
506 and the intention is not to support every variant, it's limited to
507 dlopen(). This permits the main Exim binary to not be linked against
508 all the libraries needed for all the lookup types.
509
510
511 Version 4.73
512 ------------
513
514 NOTE: this version is not guaranteed backwards-compatible, please read the
515 items below carefully
516
517 1. A new main configuration option, "openssl_options", is available if Exim
518 is built with SSL support provided by OpenSSL. The option allows
519 administrators to specify OpenSSL options to be used on connections;
520 typically this is to set bug compatibility features which the OpenSSL
521 developers have not enabled by default. There may be security
522 consequences for certain options, so these should not be changed
523 frivolously.
524
525 2. A new pipe transport option, "permit_coredumps", may help with problem
526 diagnosis in some scenarios. Note that Exim is typically installed as
527 a setuid binary, which on most OSes will inhibit coredumps by default,
528 so that safety mechanism would have to be overridden for this option to
529 be able to take effect.
530
531 3. ClamAV 0.95 is now required for ClamAV support in Exim, unless
532 Local/Makefile sets: WITH_OLD_CLAMAV_STREAM=yes
533 Note that this switches Exim to use a new API ("INSTREAM") and a future
534 release of ClamAV will remove support for the old API ("STREAM").
535
536 The av_scanner option, when set to "clamd", now takes an optional third
537 part, "local", which causes Exim to pass a filename to ClamAV instead of
538 the file content. This is the same behaviour as when clamd is pointed at
539 a Unix-domain socket. For example:
540
541 av_scanner = clamd:192.0.2.3 1234:local
542
543 ClamAV's ExtendedDetectionInfo response format is now handled.
544
545 4. There is now a -bmalware option, restricted to admin users. This option
546 takes one parameter, a filename, and scans that file with Exim's
547 malware-scanning framework. This is intended purely as a debugging aid
548 to ensure that Exim's scanning is working, not to replace other tools.
549 Note that the ACL framework is not invoked, so if av_scanner references
550 ACL variables without a fallback then this will fail.
551
552 5. There is a new expansion operator, "reverse_ip", which will reverse IP
553 addresses; IPv4 into dotted quad, IPv6 into dotted nibble. Examples:
554
555 ${reverse_ip:192.0.2.4}
556 -> 4.2.0.192
557 ${reverse_ip:2001:0db8:c42:9:1:abcd:192.0.2.3}
558 -> 3.0.2.0.0.0.0.c.d.c.b.a.1.0.0.0.9.0.0.0.2.4.c.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2
559
560 6. There is a new ACL control called "debug", to enable debug logging.
561 This allows selective logging of certain incoming transactions within
562 production environments, with some care. It takes two options, "tag"
563 and "opts"; "tag" is included in the filename of the log and "opts"
564 is used as per the -d<options> command-line option. Examples, which
565 don't all make sense in all contexts:
566
567 control = debug
568 control = debug/tag=.$sender_host_address
569 control = debug/opts=+expand+acl
570 control = debug/tag=.$message_exim_id/opts=+expand
571
572 7. It has always been implicit in the design and the documentation that
573 "the Exim user" is not root. src/EDITME said that using root was
574 "very strongly discouraged". This is not enough to keep people from
575 shooting themselves in the foot in days when many don't configure Exim
576 themselves but via package build managers. The security consequences of
577 running various bits of network code are severe if there should be bugs in
578 them. As such, the Exim user may no longer be root. If configured
579 statically, Exim will refuse to build. If configured as ref:user then Exim
580 will exit shortly after start-up. If you must shoot yourself in the foot,
581 then henceforth you will have to maintain your own local patches to strip
582 the safeties off.
583
584 8. There is a new expansion condition, bool_lax{}. Where bool{} uses the ACL
585 condition logic to determine truth/failure and will fail to expand many
586 strings, bool_lax{} uses the router condition logic, where most strings
587 do evaluate true.
588 Note: bool{00} is false, bool_lax{00} is true.
589
590 9. Routers now support multiple "condition" tests.
591
592 10. There is now a runtime configuration option "tcp_wrappers_daemon_name".
593 Setting this allows an admin to define which entry in the tcpwrappers
594 config file will be used to control access to the daemon. This option
595 is only available when Exim is built with USE_TCP_WRAPPERS. The
596 default value is set at build time using the TCP_WRAPPERS_DAEMON_NAME
597 build option.
598
599 11. [POSSIBLE CONFIG BREAKAGE] The default value for system_filter_user is now
600 the Exim run-time user, instead of root.
601
602 12. [POSSIBLE CONFIG BREAKAGE] ALT_CONFIG_ROOT_ONLY is no longer optional and
603 is forced on. This is mitigated by the new build option
604 TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST which defines a list of configuration files which
605 are trusted; one per line. If a config file is owned by root and matches
606 a pathname in the list, then it may be invoked by the Exim build-time
607 user without Exim relinquishing root privileges.
608
609 13. [POSSIBLE CONFIG BREAKAGE] The Exim user is no longer automatically
610 trusted to supply -D<Macro[=Value]> overrides on the command-line. Going
611 forward, we recommend using TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST with shim configs that
612 include the main config. As a transition mechanism, we are temporarily
613 providing a work-around: the new build option WHITELIST_D_MACROS provides
614 a colon-separated list of macro names which may be overridden by the Exim
615 run-time user. The values of these macros are constrained to the regex
616 ^[A-Za-z0-9_/.-]*$ (which explicitly does allow for empty values).
617
618
619 Version 4.72
620 ------------
621
622 1. TWO SECURITY FIXES: one relating to mail-spools which are globally
623 writable, the other to locking of MBX folders (not mbox).
624
625 2. MySQL stored procedures are now supported.
626
627 3. The dkim_domain transport option is now a list, not a single string, and
628 messages will be signed for each element in the list (discarding
629 duplicates).
630
631 4. The 4.70 release unexpectedly changed the behaviour of dnsdb TXT lookups
632 in the presence of multiple character strings within the RR. Prior to 4.70,
633 only the first string would be returned. The dnsdb lookup now, by default,
634 preserves the pre-4.70 semantics, but also now takes an extended output
635 separator specification. The separator can be followed by a semicolon, to
636 concatenate the individual text strings together with no join character,
637 or by a comma and a second separator character, in which case the text
638 strings within a TXT record are joined on that second character.
639 Administrators are reminded that DNS provides no ordering guarantees
640 between multiple records in an RRset. For example:
641
642 foo.example. IN TXT "a" "b" "c"
643 foo.example. IN TXT "d" "e" "f"
644
645 ${lookup dnsdb{>/ txt=foo.example}} -> "a/d"
646 ${lookup dnsdb{>/; txt=foo.example}} -> "def/abc"
647 ${lookup dnsdb{>/,+ txt=foo.example}} -> "a+b+c/d+e+f"
648
649
650 Version 4.70 / 4.71
651 -------------------
652
653 1. Native DKIM support without an external library.
654 (Note that if no action to prevent it is taken, a straight upgrade will
655 result in DKIM verification of all signed incoming emails. See spec
656 for details on conditionally disabling)
657
658 2. Experimental DCC support via dccifd (contributed by Wolfgang Breyha).
659
660 3. There is now a bool{} expansion condition which maps certain strings to
661 true/false condition values (most likely of use in conjunction with the
662 and{} expansion operator).
663
664 4. The $spam_score, $spam_bar and $spam_report variables are now available
665 at delivery time.
666
667 5. exim -bP now supports "macros", "macro_list" or "macro MACRO_NAME" as
668 options, provided that Exim is invoked by an admin_user.
669
670 6. There is a new option gnutls_compat_mode, when linked against GnuTLS,
671 which increases compatibility with older clients at the cost of decreased
672 security. Don't set this unless you need to support such clients.
673
674 7. There is a new expansion operator, ${randint:...} which will produce a
675 "random" number less than the supplied integer. This randomness is
676 not guaranteed to be cryptographically strong, but depending upon how
677 Exim was built may be better than the most naive schemes.
678
679 8. Exim now explicitly ensures that SHA256 is available when linked against
680 OpenSSL.
681
682 9. The transport_filter_timeout option now applies to SMTP transports too.
683
684
685 Version 4.69
686 ------------
687
688 1. Preliminary DKIM support in Experimental.
689
690
691 Version 4.68
692 ------------
693
694 1. The body_linecount and body_zerocount C variables are now exported in the
695 local_scan API.
696
697 2. When a dnslists lookup succeeds, the key that was looked up is now placed
698 in $dnslist_matched. When the key is an IP address, it is not reversed in
699 this variable (though it is, of course, in the actual lookup). In simple
700 cases, for example:
701
702 deny dnslists = spamhaus.example
703
704 the key is also available in another variable (in this case,
705 $sender_host_address). In more complicated cases, however, this is not
706 true. For example, using a data lookup might generate a dnslists lookup
707 like this:
708
709 deny dnslists = spamhaus.example/<|192.168.1.2|192.168.6.7|...
710
711 If this condition succeeds, the value in $dnslist_matched might be
712 192.168.6.7 (for example).
713
714 3. Authenticators now have a client_condition option. When Exim is running as
715 a client, it skips an authenticator whose client_condition expansion yields
716 "0", "no", or "false". This can be used, for example, to skip plain text
717 authenticators when the connection is not encrypted by a setting such as:
718
719 client_condition = ${if !eq{$tls_cipher}{}}
720
721 Note that the 4.67 documentation states that $tls_cipher contains the
722 cipher used for incoming messages. In fact, during SMTP delivery, it
723 contains the cipher used for the delivery. The same is true for
724 $tls_peerdn.
725
726 4. There is now a -Mvc <message-id> option, which outputs a copy of the
727 message to the standard output, in RFC 2822 format. The option can be used
728 only by an admin user.
729
730 5. There is now a /noupdate option for the ratelimit ACL condition. It
731 computes the rate and checks the limit as normal, but it does not update
732 the saved data. This means that, in relevant ACLs, it is possible to lookup
733 the existence of a specified (or auto-generated) ratelimit key without
734 incrementing the ratelimit counter for that key.
735
736 In order for this to be useful, another ACL entry must set the rate
737 for the same key somewhere (otherwise it will always be zero).
738
739 Example:
740
741 acl_check_connect:
742 # Read the rate; if it doesn't exist or is below the maximum
743 # we update it below
744 deny ratelimit = 100 / 5m / strict / noupdate
745 log_message = RATE: $sender_rate / $sender_rate_period \
746 (max $sender_rate_limit)
747
748 [... some other logic and tests...]
749
750 warn ratelimit = 100 / 5m / strict / per_cmd
751 log_message = RATE UPDATE: $sender_rate / $sender_rate_period \
752 (max $sender_rate_limit)
753 condition = ${if le{$sender_rate}{$sender_rate_limit}}
754
755 accept
756
757 6. The variable $max_received_linelength contains the number of bytes in the
758 longest line that was received as part of the message, not counting the
759 line termination character(s).
760
761 7. Host lists can now include +ignore_defer and +include_defer, analagous to
762 +ignore_unknown and +include_unknown. These options should be used with
763 care, probably only in non-critical host lists such as whitelists.
764
765 8. There's a new option called queue_only_load_latch, which defaults true.
766 If set false when queue_only_load is greater than zero, Exim re-evaluates
767 the load for each incoming message in an SMTP session. Otherwise, once one
768 message is queued, the remainder are also.
769
770 9. There is a new ACL, specified by acl_smtp_notquit, which is run in most
771 cases when an SMTP session ends without sending QUIT. However, when Exim
772 itself is is bad trouble, such as being unable to write to its log files,
773 this ACL is not run, because it might try to do things (such as write to
774 log files) that make the situation even worse.
775
776 Like the QUIT ACL, this new ACL is provided to make it possible to gather
777 statistics. Whatever it returns (accept or deny) is immaterial. The "delay"
778 modifier is forbidden in this ACL.
779
780 When the NOTQUIT ACL is running, the variable $smtp_notquit_reason is set
781 to a string that indicates the reason for the termination of the SMTP
782 connection. The possible values are:
783
784 acl-drop Another ACL issued a "drop" command
785 bad-commands Too many unknown or non-mail commands
786 command-timeout Timeout while reading SMTP commands
787 connection-lost The SMTP connection has been lost
788 data-timeout Timeout while reading message data
789 local-scan-error The local_scan() function crashed
790 local-scan-timeout The local_scan() function timed out
791 signal-exit SIGTERM or SIGINT
792 synchronization-error SMTP synchronization error
793 tls-failed TLS failed to start
794
795 In most cases when an SMTP connection is closed without having received
796 QUIT, Exim sends an SMTP response message before actually closing the
797 connection. With the exception of acl-drop, the default message can be
798 overridden by the "message" modifier in the NOTQUIT ACL. In the case of a
799 "drop" verb in another ACL, it is the message from the other ACL that is
800 used.
801
802 10. For MySQL and PostgreSQL lookups, it is now possible to specify a list of
803 servers with individual queries. This is done by starting the query with
804 "servers=x:y:z;", where each item in the list may take one of two forms:
805
806 (1) If it is just a host name, the appropriate global option (mysql_servers
807 or pgsql_servers) is searched for a host of the same name, and the
808 remaining parameters (database, user, password) are taken from there.
809
810 (2) If it contains any slashes, it is taken as a complete parameter set.
811
812 The list of servers is used in exactly the same was as the global list.
813 Once a connection to a server has happened and a query has been
814 successfully executed, processing of the lookup ceases.
815
816 This feature is intended for use in master/slave situations where updates
817 are occurring, and one wants to update a master rather than a slave. If the
818 masters are in the list for reading, you might have:
819
820 mysql_servers = slave1/db/name/pw:slave2/db/name/pw:master/db/name/pw
821
822 In an updating lookup, you could then write
823
824 ${lookup mysql{servers=master; UPDATE ...}
825
826 If, on the other hand, the master is not to be used for reading lookups:
827
828 pgsql_servers = slave1/db/name/pw:slave2/db/name/pw
829
830 you can still update the master by
831
832 ${lookup pgsql{servers=master/db/name/pw; UPDATE ...}
833
834 11. The message_body_newlines option (default FALSE, for backwards
835 compatibility) can be used to control whether newlines are present in
836 $message_body and $message_body_end. If it is FALSE, they are replaced by
837 spaces.
838
839
840 Version 4.67
841 ------------
842
843 1. There is a new log selector called smtp_no_mail, which is not included in
844 the default setting. When it is set, a line is written to the main log
845 whenever an accepted SMTP connection terminates without having issued a
846 MAIL command.
847
848 2. When an item in a dnslists list is followed by = and & and a list of IP
849 addresses, the behaviour was not clear when the lookup returned more than
850 one IP address. This has been solved by the addition of == and =& for "all"
851 rather than the default "any" matching.
852
853 3. Up till now, the only control over which cipher suites GnuTLS uses has been
854 for the cipher algorithms. New options have been added to allow some of the
855 other parameters to be varied.
856
857 4. There is a new compile-time option called ENABLE_DISABLE_FSYNC. When it is
858 set, Exim compiles a runtime option called disable_fsync.
859
860 5. There is a new variable called $smtp_count_at_connection_start.
861
862 6. There's a new control called no_pipelining.
863
864 7. There are two new variables called $sending_ip_address and $sending_port.
865 These are set whenever an SMTP connection to another host has been set up.
866
867 8. The expansion of the helo_data option in the smtp transport now happens
868 after the connection to the server has been made.
869
870 9. There is a new expansion operator ${rfc2047d: that decodes strings that
871 are encoded as per RFC 2047.
872
873 10. There is a new log selector called "pid", which causes the current process
874 id to be added to every log line, in square brackets, immediately after the
875 time and date.
876
877 11. Exim has been modified so that it flushes SMTP output before implementing
878 a delay in an ACL. It also flushes the output before performing a callout,
879 as this can take a substantial time. These behaviours can be disabled by
880 obeying control = no_delay_flush or control = no_callout_flush,
881 respectively, at some earlier stage of the connection.
882
883 12. There are two new expansion conditions that iterate over a list. They are
884 called forany and forall.
885
886 13. There's a new global option called dsn_from that can be used to vary the
887 contents of From: lines in bounces and other automatically generated
888 messages ("delivery status notifications" - hence the name of the option).
889
890 14. The smtp transport has a new option called hosts_avoid_pipelining.
891
892 15. By default, exigrep does case-insensitive matches. There is now a -I option
893 that makes it case-sensitive.
894
895 16. A number of new features ("addresses", "map", "filter", and "reduce") have
896 been added to string expansions to make it easier to process lists of
897 items, typically addresses.
898
899 17. There's a new ACL modifier called "continue". It does nothing of itself,
900 and processing of the ACL always continues with the next condition or
901 modifier. It is provided so that the side effects of expanding its argument
902 can be used.
903
904 18. It is now possible to use newline and other control characters (those with
905 values less than 32, plus DEL) as separators in lists.
906
907 19. The exigrep utility now has a -v option, which inverts the matching
908 condition.
909
910 20. The host_find_failed option in the manualroute router can now be set to
911 "ignore".
912
913
914 Version 4.66
915 ------------
916
917 No new features were added to 4.66.
918
919
920 Version 4.65
921 ------------
922
923 No new features were added to 4.65.
924
925
926 Version 4.64
927 ------------
928
929 1. ACL variables can now be given arbitrary names, as long as they start with
930 "acl_c" or "acl_m" (for connection variables and message variables), are at
931 least six characters long, with the sixth character being either a digit or
932 an underscore.
933
934 2. There is a new ACL modifier called log_reject_target. It makes it possible
935 to specify which logs are used for messages about ACL rejections.
936
937 3. There is a new authenticator called "dovecot". This is an interface to the
938 authentication facility of the Dovecot POP/IMAP server, which can support a
939 number of authentication methods.
940
941 4. The variable $message_headers_raw provides a concatenation of all the
942 messages's headers without any decoding. This is in contrast to
943 $message_headers, which does RFC2047 decoding on the header contents.
944
945 5. In a DNS black list, if two domain names, comma-separated, are given, the
946 second is used first to do an initial check, making use of any IP value
947 restrictions that are set. If there is a match, the first domain is used,
948 without any IP value restrictions, to get the TXT record.
949
950 6. All authenticators now have a server_condition option.
951
952 7. There is a new command-line option called -Mset. It is useful only in
953 conjunction with -be (that is, when testing string expansions). It must be
954 followed by a message id; Exim loads the given message from its spool
955 before doing the expansions.
956
957 8. Another similar new command-line option is called -bem. It operates like
958 -be except that it must be followed by the name of a file that contains a
959 message.
960
961 9. When an address is delayed because of a 4xx response to a RCPT command, it
962 is now the combination of sender and recipient that is delayed in
963 subsequent queue runs until its retry time is reached.
964
965 10. Unary negation and the bitwise logical operators and, or, xor, not, and
966 shift, have been added to the eval: and eval10: expansion items.
967
968 11. The variables $interface_address and $interface_port have been renamed
969 as $received_ip_address and $received_port, to make it clear that they
970 relate to message reception rather than delivery. (The old names remain
971 available for compatibility.)
972
973 12. The "message" modifier can now be used on "accept" and "discard" acl verbs
974 to vary the message that is sent when an SMTP command is accepted.
975
976
977 Version 4.63
978 ------------
979
980 1. There is a new Boolean option called filter_prepend_home for the redirect
981 router.
982
983 2. There is a new acl, set by acl_not_smtp_start, which is run right at the
984 start of receiving a non-SMTP message, before any of the message has been
985 read.
986
987 3. When an SMTP error message is specified in a "message" modifier in an ACL,
988 or in a :fail: or :defer: message in a redirect router, Exim now checks the
989 start of the message for an SMTP error code.
990
991 4. There is a new parameter for LDAP lookups called "referrals", which takes
992 one of the settings "follow" (the default) or "nofollow".
993
994 5. Version 20070721.2 of exipick now included, offering these new options:
995 --reverse
996 After all other sorting options have bee processed, reverse order
997 before displaying messages (-R is synonym).
998 --random
999 Randomize order of matching messages before displaying.
1000 --size
1001 Instead of displaying the matching messages, display the sum
1002 of their sizes.
1003 --sort <variable>[,<variable>...]
1004 Before displaying matching messages, sort the messages according to
1005 each messages value for each variable.
1006 --not
1007 Negate the value for every test (returns inverse output from the
1008 same criteria without --not).
1009
1010
1011 Version 4.62
1012 ------------
1013
1014 1. The ${readsocket expansion item now supports Internet domain sockets as well
1015 as Unix domain sockets. If the first argument begins "inet:", it must be of
1016 the form "inet:host:port". The port is mandatory; it may be a number or the
1017 name of a TCP port in /etc/services. The host may be a name, or it may be an
1018 IP address. An ip address may optionally be enclosed in square brackets.
1019 This is best for IPv6 addresses. For example:
1020
1021 ${readsocket{inet:[::1]:1234}{<request data>}...
1022
1023 Only a single host name may be given, but if looking it up yield more than
1024 one IP address, they are each tried in turn until a connection is made. Once
1025 a connection has been made, the behaviour is as for ${readsocket with a Unix
1026 domain socket.
1027
1028 2. If a redirect router sets up file or pipe deliveries for more than one
1029 incoming address, and the relevant transport has batch_max set greater than
1030 one, a batch delivery now occurs.
1031
1032 3. The appendfile transport has a new option called maildirfolder_create_regex.
1033 Its value is a regular expression. For a maildir delivery, this is matched
1034 against the maildir directory; if it matches, Exim ensures that a
1035 maildirfolder file is created alongside the new, cur, and tmp directories.
1036
1037
1038 Version 4.61
1039 ------------
1040
1041 The documentation is up-to-date for the 4.61 release. Major new features since
1042 the 4.60 release are:
1043
1044 . An option called disable_ipv6, to disable the use of IPv6 completely.
1045
1046 . An increase in the number of ACL variables to 20 of each type.
1047
1048 . A change to use $auth1, $auth2, and $auth3 in authenticators instead of $1,
1049 $2, $3, (though those are still set) because the numeric variables get used
1050 for other things in complicated expansions.
1051
1052 . The default for rfc1413_query_timeout has been changed from 30s to 5s.
1053
1054 . It is possible to use setclassresources() on some BSD OS to control the
1055 resources used in pipe deliveries.
1056
1057 . A new ACL modifier called add_header, which can be used with any verb.
1058
1059 . More errors are detectable in retry rules.
1060
1061 There are a number of other additions too.
1062
1063
1064 Version 4.60
1065 ------------
1066
1067 The documentation is up-to-date for the 4.60 release. Major new features since
1068 the 4.50 release are:
1069
1070 . Support for SQLite.
1071
1072 . Support for IGNOREQUOTA in LMTP.
1073
1074 . Extensions to the "submission mode" features.
1075
1076 . Support for Client SMTP Authorization (CSA).
1077
1078 . Support for ratelimiting hosts and users.
1079
1080 . New expansion items to help with the BATV "prvs" scheme.
1081
1082 . A "match_ip" condition, that matches an IP address against a list.
1083
1084 There are many more minor changes.
1085
1086 ****